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Depression

This section will take a look at the subject of Depression. Other topics that contain information for women can be found further down the page.

Depression isn't caused by personal weakness. Depression is more common a week before a woman's period and in the weeks after a woman gives birth (this is called postpartum depression). Depression is one of the most frequently-studied aspects of chronic pain's impact on psychological health. Rates for probable depression in pain patients range from 38% to 87%.

 Women with severe cases of depression generally are hospitalized, and many more are treated for depression on an outpatient basis. Approximately 19 million American adults suffer from depression each year, including five million working women. Depression interferes with the ability to work, sleep, eat, study, and enjoy activities. Light therapy appears to be effective for depression during pregnancy, and may be helpful in the postpartum as well. When medication is necessary or preferred, conventional antidepressants at standard doses are as efficacious for postpartum depression as for depression generally.

Depression may have been a natural way of contraception during times of starvation or war.

Unipolar major depression is the most common psychiatric condition seen by primary care physicians, and most epidemiologic studies have shown that it is more prevalent in women than in men. Depressive disorders affect approximately 20 million American adults each year.

Researchers have studied depression a great deal, yet women's depression has rarely been the primary focus. The contexts of women's lives which might contribute to their depression are not often addressed by the mental health establishment, which tends to focus on biological factors.

Biological danger zones and environmental triggers play a complex and powerful role in the high rate of depression in women between the ages of 35 and 65. Women for Women, a panel of female physicians, sponsored by the American Medical Women's Association, cited certain periods in a woman's life when her biological makeup combined with external factors can increase her likelihood of becoming depressed.

Those with a history of depression any time before their pregnancy--about one in four--are almost twice as likely to show signs of depression while expecting. The study reveals troubling under-diagnosis and -treatment of depression in pregnancy.

About one in 20 American women who are pregnant or have given birth in the past 12 months have major depression. When episodes of major and minor depression are combined, as many as 13 percent of women experience depression. Factors contributing to depression during or after pregnancy may include a personal or family history of depression or substance abuse, anxiety about the unborn child, problems with a previous pregnancy or birth, and marital or financial problems.

Employed Korean women in the United States who had higher educational levels reported significantly less depression than their counterparts who had lower educational levels.

Denial is one of the most common responses to clinical depression. Those with clinical depression suffer from abnormally low levels of serotonin, and most antidepressant medicines counteract the disorder by raising serotonin levels.

 

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